Potential air strikes in Syria cause concern for Syrian-Armenians in Glendale

Leaders in local Syrian-Armenian community oppose U.S. military action.

While President Barack Obama announced Friday that any military action responding to chemical attacks in Syria would be limited in scope, leaders in the Syrian-Armenian community in Glendale said they oppose any armed response from the United States.

“I don’t want my country to be that merchant of destruction,” said Zaven Khanjian, an Aleppo native and Glendale real estate agent who leads the nonprofit Syrian Armenian Relief Fund. “Whatever [the military action] is, it will bring death and destruction.”

As the conflict between rebels and the sitting government led by Syrian President Bashar Assad has worsened over the past two years, locals’ fears for their friends and family in Syria — especially those in the large city of Aleppo, which has been one of the hardest hit by violence — have ballooned.

During a televised announcement Friday, Obama said he has not made a final decision, but he assured Americans he is against a long-term response.

“We’re not considering any open-ended commitment. We’re not considering any boots-on-the-ground approach,” he said.

The president’s announcement comes after the U.S. intelligence community released a report Friday detailing a chemical weapons attack, which they believed was carried out by the Syrian government using a nerve agent.

Despite Obama’s assurance, the Armenian community in Syria is preparing for an imminent attack and war, said Lena Bozoyan, chairwoman of the Armenian Relief Society of Western USA's executive board.

Her organization, which has given financial aid to Syrian-Armenian charities during the conflict, believes “the whole Armenian community worldwide [is] very wary and concerned of military intervention that would only add to the suffering of all people on both sides and would not be a solution to the conflict in Syria and could threaten and destabilize the whole region.”

The British Parliament voted on Thursday against taking military action in Syria, while French President Francois Hollande supported air strikes.